Sunday, September 20, 2015

Clarifying Carly Fiorina's Record at Hewlett-Packard


After Carly Fiorina’s second fantastic debate performance, many are now seeing her as a serious candidate for the presidency. So, of course, the Left’s libelers and slanderers have pulled out the long knives against her. These attacks are not new, but they will grow sharper as her campaign advances. Below I address one aspect of these attacks: Fiorina’s experience as CEO of Hewlett-Packard (HP). Others, including Bloomberg and the campaign itself, have also begun responding forcefully to these attacks. See http://bv.ms/1OGwSHVhttp://bloom.bg/1QTTu7bhttp://bit.ly/1JnxbR9

Carly Fiorina led one of the 20 largest companies (by revenue) in the US. http://bit.ly/1iqo1gW. Even if one were to concede that she “didn’t have a great run as CEO of Hewlett-Packard," http://for.tn/1QmCSnB, there’s plenty of evidence that she at least had a decent run leading a Fortune 20 company that had $80 billion in annual revenue and 150k employees at the time she left it. http://bit.ly/1OjrCe2.

I am not attempting here to mount a complete defense of her business record. Further, I’ve never met her and am not sure she’s my preferred pick to be our next president. But some of the attacks on her record are false and misleading and so must be addressed. These attacks are based on three undisputed facts, namely, that she was fired from HP, that HP stock price dropped during her tenure, and that she laid off 30,000 HP employees.  But her opponents (including politicians, media members, and citizen-activists) use these facts out of context to allege that she was a terrible failure at HP. She was not.
Third Attack: She laid off 30,000 HP employees.

Before we get to the analysis, here’s the punch line: Fiorina apparently did at least an okay job leading a mammoth company through very difficult economic conditions. Is an “okay” job as CEO of HP sufficient qualification for the presidency? Yes, provided the candidate also has some broader knowledge of the affairs that concern a president. Carly Fiorina handled immense responsibility during those years as CEO. Further, she has demonstrated an immense ability to learn and grow, so I have no doubt that she learned many lessons that she will apply in her next stint as an executive. And while Fiorina may not be a visionary like Steve Jobs, it is worth noting that he, too, was forced out of a leadership role. http://abcn.ws/ShJvPU. As he later acknowledged, he grew as a result of the experience, and his second stint as Apple CEO was likely more successful than the first.

Further, in a presidential election we are limited to the available alternatives; Lincoln, Reagan, and Jobs are not available. I have no doubt that Fiorina would bring a more well-developed management approach to the Oval Office than have any of our recent presidents, and her management experience compares favorably with that of any other candidate, Democrat or Republican.

First Attack: She was a failure because she was fired.

While she was ousted as Chief Executive Officer of Hewlett-Packard, she held that job from July 1999-February 2005, which is about 5.6 years. Her longevity doesn’t prove she was great at her job, but it says something since our society has very little patience with leaders who fail to impress. For example, consider how quickly people want to see head coaches fired in major professional and college sports. In fact, those 5.6 years are a full year longer than the average tenure for a Fortune 500 CEO (4.6 years). http://bit.ly/1iBSGZo. Consider also HP’s ongoing pattern of changing CEOs since she was fired:

Robert Wayman (interim CEO, one month, through March 2005)
Mark Hurd (approximately 5.4 years, through August 2010)
Cathie Lesjak (interim, one month, through September 2010)
Leo Apotheker (less than 1 year, through September 2011)
Meg Whitman (current tenure, 4 years)


Add to this the fact that Tom Perkins, a former HP board member who served with Fiorina for years and was instrumental in her ultimate firing, recently vouched for her credentials in a full-page ad in the New York Times. http://bit.ly/1JBOGxf. Concerning Fiorina’s exit, he writes: “Critics often claim was fired at HP because she was unsuccessful. As a member of the board, I can tell you this is not true. In truth, it was the Board I was a part of that was ineffective and dysfunctional . . . . In order to restore peace to the board I voted to fire her. That was a mistake.” His whole memo is worth reading, but this excerpt alone shows that Carly Fiorina’s firing may not have been based purely on performance.

In sum, Carly Fiorina impressed enough Board members to hold onto her job for quite awhile—longer, in fact, than any subsequent CEO at HP, and longer than the average Fortune 500 CEO—and at least one HP board member who voted to fire her calls her ouster a mistake.

Second AttackShe was a failure because HP’s stock price dropped while she was in charge.

HP stock price certainly didn’t climb during her tenure, but the price drop isn’t nearly as bad as is being portrayed by those who want to submarine Fiorina’s campaign. To illustrate this, the below stock charts show adjusted closing prices on a quarterly basis between June 1, 1999 and March 1, 2005—bookending Fiorina’s tenure at HP by about a month. “Adjusted closing price” is adapted from a stock’s raw closing price, http://bit.ly/1yqG75S, and it’s commonly used for historical analysis. http://bit.ly/1V0BZYF. In some charts, I’ve set a baseline $100 share price to make comparison easier (a technique that does not confuse the results). All prices are sourced from http://finance.yahoo.com.

Taken in isolation, HP’s stock performance during Fiorina’s tenure looks bad:



But you’ve heard of Microsoft, right? It’s genius-founder, Bill Gates, has been the world’s wealthiest person for about the last 20 years. Bill Gates was CEO of Microsoft when Fiorina took over at HP. When he subsequently handed the reigns of Microsoft to his friend Steve Ballmer (now a billionaire himself), he remained on as Chairman of the Board and Chief Software Architect. Pretty effective business leader, right? Here’s a side-by-side comparison of Microsoft and HP stock prices during that period.


So HP stock did about as well as Microsoft stock? Yes, although neither did well in absolute terms.

Continuing this analysis, HP’s performance during this time period compares favorably with that of three other widely known technology companies: AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon.        


Moving beyond these telecommunications providers that are well known to consumers, we see a similar result when HP is compared to Cisco, a massive provider of the networking equipment that powers the internet.


Clearly, HP was not alone in its struggles during the timeframe when Fiorina was CEO.

This is not to say that HP stock was a stellar performer, as the below chart shows it did not perform as well as two other technology companies with which I’m sure you’re familiar: IBM and Intel. 


But the Bloomberg chart illustrates that HP stock actually did better than IBM stock when you consider it five years out. Another clear takeaway from these charts is that technology stocks overall took a beating during the timeframe at issue, especially from 2000-2002.

Indeed, the survival of HP as a company was no sure thing, as several HP competitors from the early 2000s, such as Sun Microsystems and Gateway Computer, have ceased to exist as independent companies. http://bit.ly/1Lm3hT2; http://bit.ly/1ODJEa6. Another once-fierce competitor, Compaq, was struggling mightily before HP acquired it in 2002. (That merger, which has been criticized by some, was announced only shortly before the 9-11 terrorists attacks that rocked the nation’s economy. http://nyti.ms/1MkB79N.)

In sum, HP’s performance under Fiorina is neither outstanding nor disastrous when compared with all the aforementioned entities, along with the index of the technology-heavy NASDAQ stock exchange itself:


Third AttackShe was a failure because she laid off 30,000 HP employees during her tenure.

She did lay off at least 30,000 employees over the course of several years. Having been laid off myself once (when my wife was pregnant with our first child), I know that layoffs stink. Unfortunately, they are also an unavoidable part of a capitalist system--a system I support. (As I found out, layoffs are also an opportunity to learn and grow.) Indeed, the obligation of anyone leading a corporation is to maximize the value of the company to its owners, and this sometimes requires layoffs. And employees laid off from technology companies are more likely (though not guaranteed) to have skills that enable them to find new, quality employment.

But let’s give that 30,000 number some context, in light of the poor state of the economy at the time. In addition to the general economic headwinds (dot-com bubble bursting, 9-11 attacks) of the new millenium, 2001 “was a historical year for the PC. Historically bad, that is. Sales took a prolonged dip for the first time since 1986.” http://abcn.ws/1V0fumJ.

Below is a list of nearly 20 companies that had 20,000 or more combined layoffs in 2001-2003, with parenthetical indication of entities that had 30,000 or more layoffs. Most of the companies in the following list, like HP, are in the technology sector. Companies in the airline industry are intentionally left off the following lists, given the cataclysmic effect that the 9-11 attacks had on that industry. Here’s the list:

Alcatel (over 30,000 combined layoffs)
Ames Department Stores
ATT Wireless (over 30,000)
Chrysler
Dana
Delphi Automotive
Ford (over 30,000)
IBM
JDS Uniphase
K-Mart (over 30,000)
Lucent
Montgomery Ward
Motorola (over 30,000)
Nortel (over 30,000)
SBC Communications
Solectron (over 30,000)
Worldcom


Indeed, contemporaneous with Fiorina’s tenure at HP, at least the following five companies had a SINGLE ROUND of layoffs in excess of 20,000 employees (HP never did so under Fiorina):

Ford (35,000 layoffs announced at once)
K-Mart (35,000)
Chrysler (26,000)
Lucent (24,000) (Fiorina worked with Lucent, but these layoffs occurred two years after she left)
Ames Department Stores (22,000)


Here’s a partial list of 15 additional companies with at least 10,000 combined layoffs in the years 2001-2003:

Agilent
Alcoa
AT&T
Cisco
Compaq (before it was acquired by HP)
Ericsson
FedEx
Fujitsu
Hitachi
Honeywell
Kodak
Qwest
Sprint
Starwood Hotels
Tyco


Also, Gateway Computer, a major HP competitor that managed to stay off these lists, did exceed 10k layoffs when you include layoffs in 2004. http://bit.ly/1Mvgw5D.

Regrettably, large layoffs continue today. For example, Microsoft recently laid off 18,000 people and just announced another 2,000 layoffs. http://for.tn/1DbdI4o. HP also has laid off tens of thousands in the past four years and just announced up to 33,000 more layoffs http://bayareane.ws/1QgBnaG. (These more recent layoffs cannot be blamed on Fiorina, who left the company more than 10 years ago. If anything, they point to longstanding problems with HP that may have adversely affected her as well as HP’s current leadership.)


The bottom line is that the layoffs at HP under Fiorina, though unfortunate, do not show her to be incompetent or heartless as a chief executive.